When I
look at my little boy today it is difficult to believe that two and a
half years of his life was pure torture…. torture for him as well
as I. I watched my baby deteriorate in front of my eyes and all the
while his doctor kept assuring me, ‘It is something viral. Let it
run its course.’ Or, ‘Your son has asthma and reflux, he is going
to cough.’ His doctor couldn’t have been more wrong. Here is our
journey, in a very small nutshell.
My
pregnancy was hard. When I say hard I mean I was incredibly sick,
vomiting up to 30 times a day, suffering from Hyperemesis,
Polyhydramnios and an incompetent cervix. These three things had
never been a part of my vocabulary but I never knew how many more
words that I would add to my vocabulary after my pregnancy and caring
for my child. I was on bed rest for a total of almost 7 months and
had a PIC line to administer fluids and IV Zofran so I could stay
hydrated. At 23 weeks I went into active labor with my son and at
that time I had about a millimeter of cervix left to protect my son
from being born. I felt cheated. I had worked so hard doing
everything I was told to protect my son and sustain a pregnancy and
then I get hit with that? Thankfully, my contractions were stopped
for the most part and I was released from the hospital after a week
on strict bed rest. My doctor advised me, if I made it to 32 weeks it
would be a miracle… yet we were shooting for 28 weeks. 28 weeks
came, then 29, 30, 31, 32, (I was ecstatic and my doctor was amazed!)
33weeks, 34, 35, 36, 37, then 38 weeks. I was more proud of myself,
my body and my unborn child for lasting that long! It worked, I kept
him in! At 38 ½ weeks I was induced and ready to finally hold my
precious baby. After 14 hours of labor I had progressed NONE. I
couldn’t believe that I was begging my son to stay in and then he
wouldn’t come out!? My doctor knew I was less than happy and
scheduled a C-Section for that next Monday due to having way too much
fluid and the potential of another failed induction. I went in to the
hospital and checked in for my C-Section, knowing I was leaving with
a baby this time. Twenty minutes after I was wheeled into the
operating room I heard, ‘Happy birthday big boy!’ I lost it. I
heard this squeal cry… the most amazing sound I have ever heard in
my life. The doctor held him over the curtain and I couldn’t
believe he was finally here. Evan Kingston was born at 7lbs 5oz, 19 ½
inches long and he was PERFECT. He had ten fingers, ten toes, he was
active and alert. He had some trouble breastfeeding but I was assured
that was fairly normal and to keep trying. I tried at the hospital
and continued at home. No matter what I did, I had to stop. My
production was gone and my post partum started at that time. Felling
like a terrible mother was an understatement.
Then,
he started getting sick. Everything started with what seemed like a
constant cold and problems feeding. Evan vomited at almost every
feeding and when I say vomit, I don’t mean a little spit up I am
talking about full blown projectile vomit. Evan was a frequent flyer
at the pediatrician’s office but I was always assured that this was
all normal and the mucousy cough, nasal discharge and wheezing was
very likely due to me giving birth via C-Section. I was also assured
it would all get better with time. When Evan was roughly four months
old his pediatrician finally referred him to a Pediatric
Pulmonologist. The visit to that doctor left me less than thrilled as
my son was diagnosed with ‘asthma.’ Over the first year, Evan was
diagnosed with asthma and GERD, (reflux) which was still not good
enough for me. They were missing something…. I knew it. After many
appointments to Evan’s pediatrician over the first year of his
life, he ended up having a sweat test to determine whether he had
Cystic Fibrosis. The wait for the test result was grueling.
Thankfully, his sweat test came back negative for CF. I was very
thankful for the answer but still confused because we still had no
diagnosis and I was beginning to feel like maybe I really was just a,
‘crazy over-bearing first time mother.’
At 15 ½
months old, my mother gave me the name of a new pediatrician and I
promptly made an appointment. I showed the doctor pictures and videos
of Evan and his breathing, coughing and vomiting. She LISTENED and
allowed me to cry and beg her to help my poor baby. She immediately
knew something was very wrong. We were referred to a Pediatric
Otolaryngologist (ENT doc) and anxiously awaited the appointment. The
day came and I took my smiling, happy, sick baby into the office
praying that we would finally get some answers. 30 minutes later I
met my son’s angel…. Dr Adrian Latz of Children’s Mercy
Hospital in Kansas City, MO. I call her my son’s angel because she
truly saved my son’s life. Dr Latz listened to Evan’s medical
history and did her usual question and answer for each new patient.
She used a very small tube and inserted it into Evan’s nasal
passage to get a better look at his throat and airway. That is when I
heard that word for the first time… Laryngomalacia.
Evan
was diagnosed with Laryngomalacia instantly after the scope and a
plan of action was set forth. I have been asked many times how I felt
in the moment of his diagnosis and I believe that to be a pretty
loaded question. I felt angry, sad, scared, unprepared but most of
all I felt VINDICATED. I was right all along. For 16 months my child
was drowning in his own fluids. After all of the bronchitis,
pneumonia, nasal discharge, vomiting, stridor etc, WHY did it take so
long for someone to catch this?
A
swallow study was scheduled, his diet was changed and we discussed
the other ailments that can follow an LM diagnosis. I was assured we
would know more after the swallow study and yes…. we learned more.
His swallow study showed penetrations on every thickness of liquid
until we reached honey. I was devastated for my child. I knew we had
an even harder road ahead of us but felt very optimistic and ready to
do whatever it took to get my child healthy. We started thickening
all of his liquids and watching for any progress. Sadly, there wasn’t
as much progress as we had hoped and we discussed the possibility of
performing a Supraglottoplasty and also gel foam injections if he did
in fact have a laryngeal cleft. We did another swallow study before
making the decision of surgery and the result came back that his
penetrations/aspirations were worse.
Less
than a month before my son’s 2nd
birthday, I took my son into the hospital and signed the paperwork to
allow his procedure to be performed. My mother and I played with him
and took pictures while we waited for him to go back to the operating
room to keep him from getting anxious. He was already used to
hospitals so that wasn’t too big of a deal to him. When the nurse
said it was time, I remember thinking in my mind, ‘Please God,
guide his surgeons hands and heal my child. Please God, allow this
procedure to change his life so he can have a more normal life.’ I
handed my baby to the nurse and watched her walk away with him while
he was screaming for me and crying…. I have never felt so guilty in
my life. I chose this surgery for him, I put him in her arms, I
signed the consent form and if something happens to him it is all on
ME.
The
doctor told us the surgery would take roughly an hour or two and she
would come down after the surgery and let me know how it went. My
mother and I waited in the room with all the other parents and
grandparents waiting to find out the fate of their child. An hour and
a half later his surgeon came down and took me into a conference room
where she told me that Evan’s surgery went excellent. She said we
had made the right choice because there is no way that his condition
would have improved over time. She ended up doing the
Supraglottoplasty and gel foam injections into Evan’s larynx due to
the significant laryngeal cleft that he had. I was ELATED! My sweet
boy will get better and I made the right choice! The surgeon said
that Evan would be in recovery for about an hour and a half then be
transported to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. I came out of the
room to update my mom and we cried, hugged and thanked God for this
opportunity for Evan. Then we waited. One hour went by…. And hour
and a half went by and I started feeling strange. I finally got an
update from the recovery room nurse who said, ‘Evan has had a hard
time with the anesthesia. He is having dips in his oxygen and not
waking up like we want him to. We ask parents to prepare themselves
in times like these.’ I just hung up the phone. I was frozen. I
couldn’t talk, I couldn’t speak, I couldn’t move. Then my brain
flipped back on and I said to myself, ‘I will not prepare myself
for ANYTHING, other than taking my child HOME.’
3 ½
hours after his surgery ended, we got the call to meet my son in the
‘reunion hallway.’ He was in this cage like crib and hooked up to
monitors with tubes everywhere. I had never seen something like that
and I had a lot of silent tears. The nurses had us follow behind his
bed so that Evan didn’t see us and get agitated. We got to the room
and he was still very groggy and wasn’t opening his eyes much in
the first few minutes. I walked over to his bed once they got him
settled, played with his sweaty hair, held his hand and kept telling
him, ‘Mommy is here baby, Mommy is here. Everything is going to be
okay, I promise you.’ The nurses asked if I wanted to hold him and
I of course said YES! I got situated in the recliner in his room and
they brought him over to me and placed him in my arms. I tried so
hard to be strong but at the moment I lost it…. I cried and held
him tight in my arms and couldn’t stop kissing his head and moving
his hair around. Something came over me in that moment they put him
in my arms- something similar to the first time he was EVER placed in
my arms, except it felt better than that. I never though anything
would feel better than holding my son for the first time yet, this
was 100x better than that. I said out loud, ‘Thank you GOD, oh
thank you GOD!’ Over and over and I have no idea how many times I
said it. Everyone in the room was crying and my mother was able to
get a few photos of the moment.
Evan
recovered well from the surgery and after a few months of weaning him
off of his thickener…. He was done. No more thickener. No more
reflux medication. No more limited diet. My son was finally freed
from the unfair prison he had been locked into for so long. My son IS
a fighter. My son survived.
Evan
turns 4 years old in just three short weeks and I couldn’t be more
optimistic about his health and future. He has grown out of every
symptom of LM including recurrent croup which was the last on the
list and that stopped about 6 months ago. I have to assure you
parents that it WILL get better. Some get better faster while some
take a little more time and more medical intervention. Some get
diagnosed within days or weeks and some take 16 months or more, like
my son. Every LM,TB or BM child is different but the one thing they
all have in common is their will to fight. They are innocent and
should never have to go through what they have but I can assure you,
there IS a reason for everything. Although we may not know the
reasons now, we will find out. We weren’t blessed with children who
have perfect health but we were blessed with children that are
perfect for US. God wont ever give us anything we cannot handle so
take it as a fine compliment that God believes in US so much, that he
entrusted us to care for his most special creations.
When I
look at my little boy today, I think how blessed we are to have each
other. I think of how my life and his life may not have gone as we
could have ever imagined but we faced a demon and we beat it.
WE are
fighters and HE is my pint sized powerhouse.
Always counting my
blessings…. Evan- I will hug you, cuddle you, kiss you, hold you
and love you all the days of my life. I will never take a single
second for granted. You fought to stay with me and I will continue to
fight to keep you happy and healthy.
BREATHE
EASY!
-Megan
Crone